Ashley Johnson
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I give permission for public access to my thesis and for any copying to be done at the discretion of the archives librarian and/or the College librarian. _________________________________________ MOUNT HOLYOKE COLLEGE HEALING THE WOUNDS OF FASCISM: THE AMERICAN MEDICAL BRIGADE AND THE SPANISH CIVIL WAR AN UNDERGRADUATE THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT FOR THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF ARTS WITH HONORS DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY BY ASHLEY JOHNSON MAY 1, 2007 SOUTH HADLEY, MASSACHUSSETTS TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION…………………………………………………………1 CHAPTER ONE Why Spain?..............................................................................................11 CHAPTER TWO Hospital Life: Optimism, Trauma, and the Daily Grind……………..39 CHAPTER THREE The Journey Home………………………………………………………78 CONCLUSION……………………………………………………………107 APPENDIX Medical Brigade Photographs………………………………………...111 BIBLIOGRAPHY…………………………………………………………116 To my mother, Melanie Johnson, for instilling me with a love of history. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would like to thank the following people, who helped make this project a reality: To the staff of the Tamiment Labor Archives at NYU, for organizing papers, finding audio guides, and suggesting new material. To the History Department of Mount Holyoke College for generously giving me two Almara grants to carry out my research in New York. To Fredericka Martin, for working on a history of the Medical Brigade until her dying day, and for generously leaving all the material to ALBA. To my grandmother, Nanette Campbell, for trekking off to the Palo Alto library to find me microfilmed back issues of the San Francisco Chronicle. To Joy, Jessie, and Leslie, for reading drafts, listening attentively, and at times, taking me out of the library by force. And of course to Professor Daniel Czitrom, an amazing advisor, for handing me my first book about the Abraham Lincoln Brigade my sophomore year, and seeing me through it to the end. I could not have completed this project without his support, enthusiasm, and unfailing honesty. I leave Mount Holyoke not only with a passion for history but the desire to pass it on to others— thank you. Areas of American Soldiers and Medical Personnel in Spain Courtesy of Peter Carroll. The Odyssey of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade ( Stanford: 1994). 1 INTRODUCTION THE AMERICAN MEDICAL BRIGADE AND THE SPANISH CIVIL WAR “Stem the blood of Spanish Democracy!”1 In the middle of the 1930s, while the worst economic crisis in capitalist history plagued the United States, the government of a small country cried out for help against the fascist forces of General Francisco Franco. In response, the United States Left banded together, sending aid, American soldiers, and the American Medical Brigade, a group of doctors, nurses, and ambulance drivers who held one goal: the defeat of fascism in Spain. The well-known Abraham Lincoln Brigade joined the ranks of the International Brigades established out of Moscow, and quickly became the cause that unified the Popular Front of the 1930s. As of yet, no one has taken the time to tell the lesser known story of the American Medical Brigade. Nonetheless, it was equally important to the American Left at a time when Communists, Socialists, idealists, and simple anti-fascists united no matter what their nationality, color or gender to help the legitimate government of Spain. The Spanish Civil War exemplified the fight between democracy and fascism, opened the scene for World War II, and created a specific goal which joined the Popular Front during the 1930s. 2 American Medical Brigade members came from all walks of life. Dr. Edward Barsky was a graduate of Columbia’s College of Physicians and Surgeons. He was tall, charismatic, and regarded by his fellow nurses as extremely handsome. He held a respectable position as assisting surgeon on the staff of Beth Israel Hospital in New York City and had studied in Vienna, Berlin, and Paris before joining the Communist Party in 1935. Evelyn Hutchins was a spunky blonde woman of twenty-seven, who was a fervent feminist and eager to counter any man who denied her equality. She grew up in Washington with a step-father who was a militant stevedore and a suffragist mother. At age eighteen she left home to become a professional dancer but the crash of the stock market in 1929 cancelled any hopes of a career. Consequently, she turned to politics, and more specifically, the Communist Party.2 Dr. Leo Eloesser was a world famous thoracic surgeon based out of Stanford University. He spoke at least six languages, including Chinese, and had recently returned from medical service in World War I. His only political affiliation noted was that of an anti-fascist. At age fifty-nine, when Franco began his Spanish coup, he simply stated, “I hate dictators and if I hate them enough I should be doing something about it.”3 In early 1936, Salaria Kee, described by the poet Langston Hughes as “…a slender chocolate colored girl,” offered her services as a nurse to the American Red Cross to help flood victims in her home state, Ohio. On 3 account of her race, the organization turned her away. Upset, a friend mentioned volunteering in Spain. “Fascism is very well understood in America where millions of people oppose it. What else is Jim Crow but part of Fascism?”4 Henceforth, Kee resolved to be firmly anti-fascist, even if it meant risking her life for it. At first glance, these men and women may not seem to have much in common, but they shared a strong social spirit and in January of 1937, they were comrades in American Medical Brigade. Barsky was the Brigade’s head doctor, Eloesser a surgeon, Kee a nurse, and Hutchins the only female ambulance driver on the Spanish front. They journeyed to Spain in an effort to change foreign and domestic policy against Spain, and to change the course of history. The Spanish Civil War pitted a democratically elected republic, against a fascist uprising actively supported by Hitler and Mussolini. It was a complex history of insurrection and rebellion, democracy and tyranny. In 1931 the “Segunda Republica” of Spain was the first ever democratically elected government in Spanish history.5 In the spring of 1936 the government suffered from severe instability under President Azaña. Consequently, on July 17 General Francisco Franco led a right wing military insurrection against the legitimate government of Spain, declaring a military coup against the Republic. On July 18, the Insurgents moved to Seville and successfully took the city but were defeated by the Republic at Barcelona. After this defeat, the 4 Insurgents appealed to Germany and Italy for support as Franco took control of the forces and on July 26, German and Italian planes, the first of many supplies and troops, landed in Morocco to help the insurgent forces. What might have remained an internal struggle turned into a worldwide symbol of democracy against fascism.6 The Spanish Republic was one of the first nations to directly oppose fascism, a form of politics that rose to the world’s attention at the hand of Benito Mussolini, who displayed his contempt for the masses, emphasizing the need for elite leadership. It holds an emphasis on voluntarism rather than communalism. In the fascist state, the fundamental unit is the nation, one is either part of it or not. One either has national values or has none at all. The nation-state, and therefore the elite dictator, (Mussolini, Hitler, and later Franco) is the ultimate authority in all matters.7 The Spanish Republic knew it was unable to measure up to the firepower of Franco, who was backed by Mussolini and Hitler. The Republic appealed to the democracies of the world but did not receive the help it had wished for. The French provided the Loyalist government with a small number of planes before proposing a world-wide non-intervention policy, which was ignored by both Italy and Germany. The British government refused to act, and in the United States, under Roosevelt’s urgings, Congress embargoed both sides of the war. In refusing to sell arms to the Republic, the US, France, and Britain in effect sided with the Nationalist Insurgents.8 The embargo did not merely 5 prevent supplies from being given to the Spanish Republic; it denied them the right to buy firearms with which to defend themselves, and medical supplies to tend their wounded. Gradually, while watching the Spanish Republic struggle against the fascists, an international base of volunteers began to form. They started with the refugees of fascist Italy and Germany, many escapees from concentration camps. The International Brigades became a reality when the Communist party of Moscow formed official brigades to aide the Spanish Republic. In early 1937 large numbers of soldiers began to join the brigades from England, Belgium, France, Italy, Germany, Canada, along with the Abraham Lincoln Brigade of the United States. For many idealistic defenders of democracy, Madrid represented “the heart of a civilization, of a world, and of an ideal, that 35,000 men from 53 foreign lands would put their lives on the line to protect.”9 In the International Brigades, there remained the sense that one was part of a cause rather than a country. In a letter home, female Brigade nurse Dorothy Fontaine commented, “…it is wonderful to be part of an international movement. I’ve met wonderful people from all nations…”10 This international brotherhood stretched to the United States, and became the trademark of the American Popular Front. During the 1930s, the Popular Front represented the union of all Leftist groups with one common goal. Communists, Socialists, 6 liberals, and the like put aside their differences in the name of one thing: anti- fascism. Though American volunteers went overseas to serve in Spain for a plethora of reasons, over eighty percent represented the Popular Front as members of the Communist Party and still more had significant affiliations with Communist organizations.